Development of TALE-adenine base editors in plants.
Dingbo ZhangJens BochPublished in: Plant biotechnology journal (2023)
Base editors enable precise nucleotide changes at targeted genomic loci without requiring double-stranded DNA breaks or repair templates. TALE-adenine base editors (TALE-ABEs) are genome editing tools, composed of a DNA-binding domain from transcription activator-like effectors (TALEs), an engineered adenosine deaminase (TadA8e), and a cytosine deaminase domain (DddA), that allow A•T-to-G•C editing in human mitochondrial DNA. However, the editing ability of TALE-ABEs in plants apart from chloroplast DNA has not been described, so far, and the functional role how DddA enhances TadA8e is still unclear. We tested a series of TALE-ABEs with different deaminase fusion architectures in Nicotiana benthamiana and rice. The results indicate that the double-stranded DNA-specific cytosine deaminase DddA can boost the activities of single-stranded DNA-specific deaminases (TadA8e or APOBEC3A) on double-stranded DNA. We analysed A•T-to-G•C editing efficiencies in a β-glucuronidase reporter system and showed precise adenine editing in genomic regions with high product purity in rice protoplasts. Furthermore, we have successfully regenerated rice plants with A•T-to-G•C mutations in the chloroplast genome using TALE-ABE. Consequently, TALE-adenine base editors provide alternatives for crop improvement and gene therapy by editing nuclear or organellar genomes.
Keyphrases
- crispr cas
- genome editing
- circulating tumor
- nucleic acid
- cell free
- mitochondrial dna
- single molecule
- copy number
- dna binding
- gene therapy
- binding protein
- genome wide
- endothelial cells
- circulating tumor cells
- gene expression
- immune response
- arabidopsis thaliana
- cancer therapy
- protein kinase
- nuclear factor
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- pluripotent stem cells